- Second World War attack helped shape Bell Island’s history
- War, tragedy, and a Broadway hit all part of Gander’s celebrated past
- Proud captain sails to Canada’s other ‘distinct society’: Newfoundland
- What the heck is bike touring anyway? It’s an experience
- COVID panic? Keep calm and carry on with bike tour planning
- It’s not about where we travel but why
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Kindness comes in a bucket of ice and jug of water
- ConnecTour Chronicles: One man’s gear is another man’s gold
- ConnecTour Chronicles: A brush with heat stroke and then hypothermia
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Content to live with old mining town’s ghosts
- ConnectTour Chronicles: Highlights, lowlights and lessons learned so far
- ConnecTour Chronicles: An artistic treasure trove in a former biker bar
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Even in Banff, COVID-19 has left its mark
- ConnecTour Chronicles: A life-saving gift for our son-in-law
- ConnecTour Chronicles: A pool party on the Prairies
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Antique store owner revives memories
- A sudden, frightening crash sidelines one of our cyclists
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Out of the blue, an army on the prowl
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Cheap rural living brings brewery dream to life
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Warmshowers hosts have equally warm spirits
- ConnecTour Chronicles: A bicycle clinic that started with a bang
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Lodges hanging on by a thin fishing line
- ConnecTour Chronicles: A private fantasy world, rich in local and family history
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Reckless drivers are the scourge of cyclists
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Calgary bike trails a bridge between city and nature
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Wawa’s loyal support keeps country store going strong
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Learning to roll with one of this tour’s unexpected twists
- Amish follow a humble path to a simpler way of life
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Scaring away a middle-of-the-night invader
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Traumatic accident led former nurse to artistic success
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Ottawa family is all-in on car-free, cycling lifestyle
- ConnecTour Chronicles: Good luck dodging bad weather finally runs out
- Charlottetown’s heritage homes have a champion
- Cycling tour across Canada ends in St. John’s, N.L.
- Cross-country cyclists welcomed by St. John’s deputy mayor
Troy Media publisher Doug Firby and Travel editor Lisa Monforton are part of a group of Canadians who call themselves ConnecTour. Starting in May in British Columbia and ending in October in Newfoundland, they hope to make an 8,000-km bicycle journey across the country, discovering how the COVID-19 pandemic has reshaped our lives and our sense of community. Watch for their reports on Troy Media. More information on the cycling tour is available at ConnecTour.ca. To help them meet their goal, click here.
Jake Trinkner was just 13 years old when his father bought a small fishing lodge on Crow Lake, just south of Kenora, Ont., moved the family from Minnesota and set out to pursue a dream of hosting anglers.
As his mom and dad, Paul and Christine Tinkner, began to step back from the business, Jake and his wife Ashley have taken over day-to-day operations at the Muskie Bay Resort. That includes everything from cleaning the rooms to taking guests out for day-long fishing excursions and delivering their cleaned catches to them.
The parents, meanwhile, oversee the other family resort, Whitefish Bay, located nearby on Lake of the Woods. Jake says there is a “20-year plan” for him and Ashley to assume total operations when his parents fully retire.
Now 35, Jake has been part of the fishing lodge business for his entire adult life. But it’s a life that is under severe threat because of business lost to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Located just 120 kilometres north of the border with the United States, Muskie Bay has thrived – like most of the other area lodges – by catering to American sport fishermen. But when the border was closed last year, the Tinkners saw the majority of their customers disappear overnight.
“Ninety per cent of my business is American fisherman,” says Jake, who has just finished cleaning a day’s catch for guests from Calgary. Even with aggressive marketing in Canada to offset the loss, he estimates his total revenue is down 70 per cent.
Ontario tourism business owners are urging governments to step up the timeline for reopening the border. Vaccinated Americans can now come into Canada, but Canadians cannot travel south until at least Aug. 22, and perhaps longer. That’s not good enough for the struggling tourism operators.
“We need the border open as soon as possible or we won’t be here,” said Ryan Runge, owner of Slate Falls Outposts near Sioux Lookout, Ont., in a recent news event. “We need a plan to fully reopen the border so our businesses can survive.”
More than one million U.S. residents visit northwestern Ontario each year, spending more than a half-billion dollars. Laurie Marcil, executive director of Nature and Outdoor Tourism Ontario, said members of the group on average have taken on an added $100,000 in debt.
Tinkner said his family has cut expenses to the bone and is scraping by with government financial assistance.
“Every single day we were looking to see whatever loans and grants we could apply for,” he said. “It’s been tough.
“We’ve been working, but we’re not getting an income. We’ve been living on pennies.”
And yet, Tinkner is determined to hang on to a dream that started with his father and which he hopes to one day pass along to his two sons.
“You make sacrifices to live the life you want,” he says with a shrug.
The setting of their resort is both beautiful and ideal for sport fishing. Crow Lake has approximately 30,000 acres of deep water and Lake of the Woods has more than 100,000 kilometres of shoreline. Both lakes are rich in trout, pike, muskie, perch and crappie.
Just west of Atikokan, Quentin and Lori Branch have taken a different tack to weather the storm for the lodge that has been in the family since Quentin’s parents bought it in 1967.
Quentin says when the lodge lost 98 per cent of its business — American fishermen — during COVID, the couple doubled down on their short-order meal service and even started brewing their own beer. On a July summer evening, the restaurant and patio are alive with area visitors who have come just for a meal.
The restaurant business is doing so well, says Quentin, that, when the U.S. travellers finally do come back, “We’ll have to see how it will all fit in.”
The couple has also upgraded their lodge from the traditional rough style that appealed to sport fishermen in the past. Now, rooms have hotel-grade mattresses, more privacy, wifi and even colour TVs. Lori says that’s what contemporary guests expect.
The Tinkners have also added new amenities, such as a new sauna, with the goal of turning the resort into a year-round destination. If willpower counts for anything, it will be there and thriving once again when the next generation is ready to take it over.
The ConnecTour crew is on its way to Thunder Bay. Watch for more adventures from the road.
Veteran political commentator Doug Firby is president of Troy Media Digital Solutions and publisher of Troy Media. For interview requests, click here.
The views, opinions and positions expressed by columnists and contributors are the authors’ alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of our publication.
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